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Pressure Mounts for Independent Probe After Fatal ICE Shooting in Houston

A fatal encounter involving U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement agents in Houston has triggered widespread demands for an independent investigation, as civil rights groups and local officials challenge the agency’s official account of the Tuesday morning shooting that left a Mexican national dead.

The Department of Homeland Security stated that agents attempted a vehicle stop around 7:00 am as part of a targeted enforcement operation. According to the agency, the driver, identified as Lorenzo Salgado Araujo, attempted to evade arrest by ramming an ICE vehicle and refusing verbal commands. Officials claim the officer fired in self-defense after the driver attempted to run them over. Araujo was later declared dead at Ben Tab Hospital after suffering a gunshot wound to the stomach.

The Texas Civil Rights Project immediately condemned the use of force, with president Rochelle Garza citing a pattern of questionable self-defense claims in previous ICE-involved fatalities, including incidents in Minnesota and South Padre Island. Local leadership joined the call for transparency, with Congresswoman Sylvia Garcia and Houston City Council member Alejandra Salinas insisting that all available evidence and video footage must be subjected to an impartial review. The Federal Bureau of Investigation has since assumed control of the probe.

This incident follows a similar confrontation less than a week ago in Harrisburg, Pennsylvania, where a federal agent fired at a vehicle during an attempted arrest. In that case, ICE provided nearly identical justifications regarding a weaponized vehicle, drawing sharp criticism from local officials who questioned whether the agents violated Department of Justice policies. As public scrutiny intensifies, critics argue that the recurring nature of these claims points to a systemic lack of accountability within federal immigration enforcement operations.

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